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A happy atheist- by which I mean an atheist confident in their unbelief- wouldn't continually be banging on about God the way Dawkins and Hitchens and Pullman do, they'd just let the matter rest and get on with their cheerfully Godless life, wouldn't they?

I read a piece by Dawkins the other day. (Thanks to [livejournal.com profile] chiller  for the link. ) It's very ecrasez l'infame- very shrill. Dawkins thinks he's got the Pope on the run and is giving chase with loud cries.

Philip Pullman is just about to publish a book about Jesus with a provocative title. I doubt that it'll be any good. Fictions about Jesus- for or against- never are. I enjoyed the Dark Materials trilogy, but the anti-God stuff was clumsy. As Eliot said of Matthew Arnold, Pullman is dealing with a subject "in (which) reasoning power matters, and it fails him."
 
I've been an atheist. I've dreamed that dream. The one where the bastille is tottering and you put just a little more weight on the crowbar and something gives and the masses come staggering out into the light of pure Reason. It's not going to happen.

Date: 2010-03-30 06:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
In the end it matters very little what we believe or don't believe; it's how we live our lives that counts.

Date: 2010-04-01 08:20 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
It wouldn't surprise me if there was a gene for religiosity. I don't think there's any intrinsic virtue in having that gene or inclination or taste or whatever it is.

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